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by smallgovt
2135 days ago
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Without scheduled shifts, drivers will purposefully all sign up for the same shift to induce supply overflow.
In this situation, drivers can game the flexibility of the system to collect a paycheck while sitting in their cars doing nothing. Even if drivers don't game the system, there will always be natural imbalance between supply and demand. Surge bonuses can mitigate this imbalance, but scheduling shifts is the more economically efficient way to solve the imbalance problem (hence why they say schedule flexibility will no longer be a feature in a driver employment model). |
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Option 1: Deny any attempts to "clock in" whenever the number of drivers waiting in a region exceeds a certain density.
Option 2: Your shift starts when you pick up a passenger, and ends when you drop them off. (I have no idea whether this actually meets the state's requirements. I do suspect that there exists an equally clever solution that will work.)
Uber and friends built their entire businesses in working around existing laws. I'm sure they can figure out how to navigate the new laws.